Department of Oral Rehabilitation, The Maurice and Gabriela Goldschleger School of Dental Medicine, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Department of Occupational Therapy, The Stanley Steyer School of Health Professions, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
PLoS One. 2018 Mar 8;13(3):e0193980. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193980. eCollection 2018.
Dentists must be skilled when using dental mirrors. Working with mirrors requires spatial perception, bimanual coordination, perceptual learning and fine motor skills. Many studies have attempted to determine the predictors of manual skills among pre-clinical students, but consensus has yet to be reached. We hypothesized that valid and reliable occupational therapy test performance regarding indirect vision would differ between dental students and junior dentists and would explain the variance in manual skill performance in pre-clinical courses. To test this hypothesis, we applied the Purdue Pegboard test and O'Connor Tweezer Dexterity test under different conditions of direct and indirect vision. We administered these tests to students in phantom-head academic courses in 2015 and 2016 and to junior dentists. Students performed the tests at three time points: before phantom training (T0), at the end of the training (T1) and in the middle of the following year of study (T2). Dentists performed the same tests twice at 1st and 2nd trials one week apart. The results showed that indirect tasks were significantly more difficult to perform for both groups. These dexterity tests were sensitive enough to detect students' improvement after phantom training. The dentists' performances were significantly better than those of students at T0, specifically with regard to the use of tweezers under direct and indirect vision (the O'Connor test). A regression analysis showed that students' manual grades obtained at the beginning of the phantom course, their performance on the Purdue test using both hands, and their performance on the O'Connor test under indirect vision predicted phantom course success in 80% of cases. The O'Connor test under indirect vision is the most informative means of monitoring and predicting the manual skills required in the pre-clinical year of dentistry studies.
牙医在使用口镜时必须具备一定的技巧。使用口镜需要空间感知、双手协调、知觉学习和精细运动技能。许多研究试图确定临床前学生的手工技能预测因素,但尚未达成共识。我们假设,关于间接视力的职业治疗测试表现的有效性和可靠性将在牙科学生和初级牙医之间有所不同,并将解释临床前课程中手工技能表现的差异。为了检验这一假设,我们在直接和间接视力的不同条件下应用了 Purdue 钉板测试和 O'Connor Tweezer 灵巧度测试。我们在 2015 年和 2016 年向幻影头学术课程的学生以及初级牙医施测这些测试。学生在三个时间点进行测试:在幻影训练前(T0)、训练结束时(T1)和第二年学习中期(T2)。牙医在第一次和第二次试验相隔一周的情况下进行了相同的两次测试。结果表明,两组学生在间接任务上的表现都明显更为困难。这些灵巧度测试足以检测学生在幻影训练后的进步。牙医的表现明显优于学生在 T0 时的表现,特别是在直接和间接视力下使用镊子时(O'Connor 测试)。回归分析表明,学生在幻影课程开始时获得的手工成绩、双手使用 Purdue 测试的成绩以及间接视力下的 O'Connor 测试成绩可以预测 80%的幻影课程成功。间接视力下的 O'Connor 测试是监测和预测牙科临床前年度所需手工技能的最有效手段。